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Security

Submission + - Facebook: Worse Than Big Brother? (guardian.co.uk)

behe101 writes: "Tom Hodgkinson in today's Guardian has analysed the people behind Facebook and their terrible privacy policy in a scathing attack on the website. "I despise Facebook. This enormously successful American business describes itself as "a social utility that connects you with the people around you". But hang on. Why on God's earth would I need a computer to connect with the people around me? Why should my relationships be mediated through the imagination of a bunch of supergeeks in California? What was wrong with the pub?""
Security

Submission + - City techie sues Cell Company Airtel & Pune Po (indiatimes.com)

TechGuyFromIndia writes: A Bangalore-based software engineer, Lakshmana Kailash K, who was wrongly jailed for 50 days last year by the Pune police cyber cell, has demanded Rs 20 crore in damages and slapped a legal notice on telecom giant Bharti Airtel, principal secretary (Home) Maharashtra government and assistant commissioner of police (financial & cyber crime unit), Pune police. Lakshmana had been falsely accused of an internet crime — posting unseemly pictures of Chattrapati Shivaji on the web — and was arrested based on the internet protocol address provided by his internet service provider, Bharti. As it turned out, the IP address was not his. But by the time the police confirmed this and acted on it, he had already spent 50 harrowing days at the Yerwada Jail with hardened criminals, had tasted lathi beatings and was made to use one bowl to both eat and for the toilet. Lakshmana's nightmare, first reported in TOI on Nov 3, 2007, sparked condemnation on the web with internet communities posting their outrage. The techie's 10-page legal notice, a copy of which has been sent to the NHRC, vents anger at the way in which the police and judicial system made nonsense of his rights and highlights the degrading conditions within the jail.
The Internet

Submission + - Net Neutrality Summit

Castar writes: BoingBoing has a post about an upcoming summit in San Francisco about the issue of Net Neutrality. The EFF and speakers on both sides of the issue are gathering to debate and spread awareness of Network Neutrality, which is an increasingly important topic. The FCC, of course, might have the final word.
Television

Submission + - Television Censorship in Kazakhstan?

zhennian writes: "I recently had the pleasure of spending 3 months in the post-soviet Republic of Kazakhstan. We were in a rented apartment which had 'cable TV' according to the owner. I thought it interesting that Fox/BBC/CNN were absent when I did a manual scan on the LG television across the VHF/UHF bands. A few weeks before we left, I went and purchased a USB Analogue TV tuner and was surprised to find CNN/BBC/StarWorld/Movies and a number of other English speaking channels with good(?) world news and western style movies and sitcoms. Could this be a relic of communist control that still resides in the TV manufacturing process, or maybe it is actively continued by the fairly authoritarian government. I can only guess that the tuner in the LG television was a 'special' one which was blinded to the questionable channels. Anyone come across this in post soviet countries? The TV could pick up channels either side of the missing ones, so it wasn't a natural limitation of the tuner."
Music

Submission + - Pandora UK To Be Taken Down (pandora.com) 1

thetartanavenger writes: In what is another foot in the grave for the music industry, pandora.com will shortly be forced to be taken offline in the UK.

In July Pandora was forced to close it doors to the rest of the world, however it clung to that little piece of hope that they would be able to keep it running for the UK. However, despite long attempts to work out an affordable deal with the record companies, Tim Westergren, the founder of Pandora, has sent out this email to all of it's UK listeners. Just how long is it going to be until this will happen to those of you in the states too?

RIP Pandora UK. You will be missed.

Privacy

Submission + - If Your Hard Drive Could Testify ...

An anonymous reader writes: A couple of years ago, Michael T. Arnold landed at the Los Angeles International Airport after a 20-hour flight from the Philippines. He had his laptop with him, and a customs officer took a look at what was on his hard drive. Clicking on folders called "Kodak pictures" and "Kodak memories," the officer found child pornography. The search was not unusual: the government contends that it is perfectly free to inspect every laptop that enters the country, whether or not there is anything suspicious about the computer or its owner. Rummaging through a computer's hard drive, the government says, is no different than looking through a suitcase. One federal appeals court has agreed, and a second seems ready to follow suit. There is one lonely voice on the other side. In 2006, Judge Dean D. Pregerson of Federal District Court in Los Angeles suppressed the evidence against Mr. Arnold. "Electronic storage devices function as an extension of our own memory," Judge Pregerson wrote, in explaining why the government should not be allowed to inspect them without cause. "They are capable of storing our thoughts, ranging from the most whimsical to the most profound." Computer hard drives can include, Judge Pregerson continued, diaries, letters, medical information, financial records, trade secrets, attorney-client materials and — the clincher, of course — information about reporters' "confidential sources and story leads." But Judge Pregerson's decision seems to be headed for reversal. The three judges who heard the arguments in October in the appeal of his decision seemed persuaded that a computer is just a container and deserves no special protection from searches at the border. The same information in hard-copy form, their questions suggested, would doubtless be subject to search. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in Richmond, Va., took that position in a 2005 decision. It upheld the conviction of John W. Ickes Jr., who crossed the Canadian border with a computer containing child pornography. A customs agent's suspicions were raised, the court's decision said, "after discovering a video camera containing a tape of a tennis match which focused excessively on a young ball boy." It is true that the government should have great leeway in searching physical objects at the border. But the law requires a little more — a "reasonable suspicion" — when the search is especially invasive, as when the human body is involved. Searching a computer, said Jennifer M. Chacón, a law professor at the University of California, Davis, "is fairly intrusive." Like searches of the body, she said, such "an invasive search should require reasonable suspicion." An interesting supporting brief filed in the Arnold case by the Association of Corporate Travel Executives and the Electronic Frontier Foundation said there have to be some limits on the government's ability to acquire information. "Under the government's reasoning," the brief said, "border authorities could systematically collect all of the information contained on every laptop computer, BlackBerry and other electronic device carried across our national borders by every traveler, American or foreign." That is, the brief said, "simply electronic surveillance after the fact." The government went even further in the case of Sebastien Boucher, a Canadian who lives in New Hampshire. Mr. Boucher crossed the Canadian border by car about a year ago, and a customs agent noticed a laptop in the back seat. Asked whether he had child pornography on his laptop, Mr. Boucher said he was not sure. He said he downloaded a lot of pornography but deleted child pornography when he found it. Some of the files on Mr. Boucher's computer were encrypted using a program called Pretty Good Privacy, and Mr. Boucher helped the agent look at them, apparently by entering an encryption code. The agent said he saw lots of revolting pornography involving children. The government seized the laptop. But when it tried to open the encrypted files again, it could not. A grand jury instructed Mr. Boucher to provide the password. But a federal magistrate judge quashed that subpoena in November, saying that requiring Mr. Boucher to provide it would violate his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Last week, the government appealed. The magistrate judge, Jerome J. Niedermeier of Federal District Court in Burlington, Vt., used an analogy from Supreme Court precedent. It is one thing to require a defendant to surrender a key to a safe and another to make him reveal its combination. The government can make you provide samples of your blood, handwriting and the sound of your voice. It can make you put on a shirt or stand in a lineup. But it cannot make you testify about facts or beliefs that may incriminate you, Judge Niedermeier said. "The core value of the Fifth Amendment is that you can't be made to speak in ways that indicate your guilt," Michael Froomkin, a law professor at the University of Miami, wrote about the Boucher case on his Discourse.net blog. But Orin S. Kerr, a law professor at the George Washington University, said Judge Niedermeier had probably gotten it wrong. "In a normal case," Professor Kerr said in an interview, "there would be a privilege." But given what Mr. Boucher had already done at the border, he said, making him provide the password again would probably not violate the Fifth Amendment. There are all sorts of lessons in these cases. One is that the border seems be a privacy-free zone. A second is that encryption programs work. A third is that you should keep your password to yourself. And the most important, as my wife keeps telling me, is that you should leave your laptop at home. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/07/us/07bar.html?ei=5090&en=d0caa6c9bacf76ed&ex=1357362000&adxnnl=1&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&adxnnlx=1199714806-NZ2agd4Kikkv8hShxGsvKg&pagewanted=print
Government

Submission + - If Your Hard Drive Could Testify... (nytimes.com)

Embedded Geek writes: "The New York Times has an underreported story about an expected federal appeals court ruling that will uphold the government's right to search through all electronic media entering the country, just as they have the right to search through suitcases, baggage, etc. The case involves a man returning from the Philippines who was caught with child pornography on his laptop in a folder labeled "Kodak Pictures." Under the standard, officials would not need "reasonable suspicion" as is required for a body search. Instead, "border authorities could systematically collect all of the information contained on every laptop computer, BlackBerry and other electronic device carried across our national borders by every traveler, American or foreign." Interestingly, encryption seems to be the best option to protecting privacy at the border here just as it is elsewhere — as long as you never voluntarily provide the password to Customs, as they can force you to do it again if they forget to write it down."
Networking

Submission + - Google's Home Page Mangled by Canadain ISP

GeePrime writes: Lauren Weinstein writes in her blog to tell us about the latest net neutrality "shenanigans" from Canadian ISP, Rogers Cable. Rogers is infamous for throttling bit torrent traffic, even going as far as to throttle all encrypted traffic, as speculated by some users. That all seems dull by comparison to their newest trick. Scheduled to release next quarter, will insert a notification onto unaffiliated unencrypted web pages notifying users that they may have reached their cap. (Pages served via https remain unaffected). While this may not be so bad, how long would it take for them to realize that there is profit to be made by selling ad space, especially when the ad is displayed on any page served via http? How long will it take for other ISPs to adopt this technology?
Music

Submission + - Right to copy own CDs to be written into UK law

Jumbo Jimbo writes: The Times, London, is reporting that the right of users to make copies of music they have purchased may be enshrined in UK law (story is last one on the page, scroll down). This is unlawful under current copyright legislation, some of which dates back over 300 years. So no chance of being sued for copying your new CDs onto your PC and iPod, unless it's the Spice Girls reunion when they can still get you under the Outraging Common Decency statute.
Government

Submission + - Leave Your Laptop At Home When Entering the US (nytimes.com) 4

rah1420 writes: "According to a recent sidebar in the NY Times, a couple of federal appeals courts have upheld the right of the government to inspect the hard drive contents of any hard drive entering the US. So make sure you leave the pr0n at home. And your finances. And your personal correspondence. And your notes and contact list (if you're a reporter.) For my part, I am buying another hard disk. I'll just install Ubuntu and Firefox and use that if I have to travel abroad."
Security

Submission + - Top Gear Host Goes Into Reverse on Data Theft (bbc.co.uk)

autophile writes: Idiot Jeremy Clarkson, host of Britain's popular car show Top Gear, had made an ass of himself by claiming that the fuss over the loss in the post of two unencrypted CDs containing the entire database of child benefit claimants, complete with bank account details, was much ado about nothing. He further assified himself by publishing his own bank account numbers in his Sunday Times column to prove no harm was done. Oops. A day later, someone had already taken £500 from his account and donated it to charity. Now he's saying, "Contrary to what I said at the time, we must go after the idiots who lost the discs and stick cocktail sticks in their eyes until they beg for mercy." Who's the idiot now?
Yahoo!

Submission + - Yahoo! feeds porno to kids! (yahoo.com)

Patrick Klos writes: "I have an autistic 14 year old son who loves to play on his computer. He also loves airplanes, pizza, hot dogs and cars. One day I found him using Yahoo!'s image search to look for pictures of hot dogs. He gets a kick out of it. Here's the URL for the basic search:

        http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?p=hot+dog&fr=yfp-t-501&toggle=1&cop=mss&ei=UTF-8

It turns out that there are some pornographic images that contain the words "hot" and "dog" in their description, so Yahoo! returns a page indicating that the "Results for hot dog may contain adult-oriented content." It also indicates that the "SafeSearch" feature must be turned off in order to see those results. What is troublesome is that Yahoo! provides no way to view the non-pornographic results at all! It's either all or nothing. So what can a child do? My son pokes around some more hoping he can find the pictures he's looking for. Although my son doesn't understand the messages that Yahoo! is feeding him, he knows if he clicks on the links on the page, he might get further. Well, when he clicks on the "turn off" link to turn off SafeSearch, a prompt pops up asking him to verify his age:

        Turning SafeSearch off may result in the display of Web, Video and
        Image search results of a mature or sexually explicit nature. By
        clicking "I Accept," you certify that you are at least 18 years old
        and agree to the Terms of Service.

Now any kid (special needs or not) is gonna blow by this and just click on "I Accept" — it's highlighted — it must be the right button to push. So, of course, my son clicks on that button and he's presented with a page of thumbnails of pictures of "hot dogs", including the pornographic images. Luckily, he doesn't gravitate toward the pornographic images, but instead concentrates on the actual images he was looking for.

I contacted several departments at Yahoo! (abuse, support, legal), and even called and spoke with someone in their "compliance" department (which is where the operator sends you if you ask for "legal"). I got no responses from my emails and web forms, and the guy on the phone from compliance said "SafeSearch is working exactly as it's supposed to". He just didn't see how wrong it was to turn such an innocent search for pictures by a child into a pornographic fiasco! I asked why Yahoo! couldn't just make non-pornographic pictures available when SafeSearch is on, but he just insisted that there was nothing wrong.

I even created a Yahoo! account for my son so Yahoo! would know his age and hopefully tailor the search results based on that, but the search came up with the same prompts. You would think if someone is signed on with a profile indicating their age as being 14, Yahoo! wouldn't even prompt them with the "I am 18 years old" disclaimer!

Apparently, MSN and Google can get a simple innocent search for pictures of "hot dogs" right without having to disable SafeSearch or push pornographic content to our children:

        http://search.msn.com/images/results.aspx?q=hot+dog&FORM=MSNH&mkt=en-US

        http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=hot+dog&gbv=2

Why can't Yahoo!?!?!?

If you find this as outrageous as I do, please contact Yahoo! and tell them how irresponsible you think their attitude is!"

Government

Submission + - Indians need PhotoID in their own national capital (hindu.com) 2

A Concerned Indian Citizen writes: The Lieutenant-Governor of New Delhi has announced recently that Indians shall need to carry an identity card, with their photograph, at all times within the national capital. This move is being justified in the name of security of the citizenry from the terrorists. The Chief-Minister of the socio-economic state of Bihar has already written to the Prime-Minister as to how this scheme can be used to harass Bihar-residents. Unfortunately, mainstream media has not yet pointed out that this scheme only increases potential for caste/religion/race based discrimination, fanning the communal fires even more.

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